The answer is:
B. What people are usually doing while suffering is taking place.
In the poem "Musée des Beaux Arts," the author W. H. Auden makes reference to Icarus' horrible fall into the sea, which happens unnoticed by nearby people who are performing their own daily activities. In this way, the writer intends to highlight that sometimes people are so engaged in their ordinary labors that they fail to acknowledge when torment and anguish occur to others.
Hi. You did not enter the text to which this question refers, which makes it impossible for it to be answered. However, I will try to help you as best I can.
To answer this question, you will need to read the text it is related to. During this reading, you will be able to identify the connection between literacy and art through the relationship that the author establishes between these two elements, that is, the author will demonstrate a type of relationship between art and literacy, capable of creating good and positive for something or someone.
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A parody is a composition that imitates the style of another composition, normally for comic effect and often by applying that style to an outlandish or inappropriate subject. Seth Grahame-Smith's Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is a perfect example of parody. Grahame-Smith took Jane Austen's text and introduced zombies into the storyline. Throughout the reworked novel, he maintained Austen's writing style, voice, and even much of the original storyline, creating a new work that is recognizable as being Jane Austen's but that definitely isn't.
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A satire, on the other hand, is intended to do more than just entertain; it tries to improve humanity and its institutions. A satire is a literary work that tries to arouse the reader's disapproval of an object — a vice, an abuse, a faulty belief — by holding it up to ridicule. Satirists use euphemism, irony, exaggeration, and understatement to show, with a greater or lesser degree of levity, the follies of mankind and the paradoxes and idiocy that they can lead to.Some great examples of satire include George Orwell's Animal Farm, which ridicules the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia; Voltaire's Candide, which attacks the philosophy of Optimism; and Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, which satirizes the "high-class" tastes, social expectations, and popular philosophies of his time.